Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

George Gollin University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "George Gollin University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and"— Presentation transcript:

1 Working group 3 summary: ILC Injector sources, kickers, damping rings, bunch compressors
George Gollin University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

2 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
Outline Goals and organization Sources Kickers Damping rings Bunch compressors Post-SLAC, pre-KEK activities George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

3 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
Goals Part of our charge: Review the technical issues with SC-LC; Develop a list of design elements that are: non-controversial in concept and may only need optimization should be considered open for evaluation from scratch; Present the topics the different groups are interested in… George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

4 How we organized things
Upstream to downstream, grouped by major subsystem: sources kicker damping rings bunch compressors Presentations tended to describe: specific work already under way future directions and concerns We discussed risks and current status of R&D status after presentations concerning each subsystem. George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

5 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
Branch points Some topics will eventually lead to ILC configuration choices among very different machine possibilities: should there be an e+ pre-damping ring or not? undulator or conventional e+ source? fast pulsed asymmetric kicker, or some kind of RF device? 17 km dog bone damping ring, 6 km, or 3 km circular ring? generate e+ using main linac beam, or build an independent linac? one-stage or two-stage bunch compressors? should there be a “feed-forward turnaround” (perhaps between damping ring extraction and main linac ejection)? George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

6 Estimates of risk and current R&D status
See please take the numbers with a grain of salt. Performance impact: 0. No impact on overall machine performance, cost, or schedule 1. Minor impact 2. Significant impact 3. It’ll never fly, Orville R&D status 0. We already know how to do it 1. Technology exists and we’re pretty confident it’ll work 2. There is a proposed solution, but it needs to be demonstrated 3. We are nearly clueless. George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

7 Example: kicker for 6 km damping ring
From technical challenge performance impact R&D status 6 ns rise / 60 ns fall 2 kick angle 3 1 repetition rate reflections 0.1% pulse-to-pulse stability Contribution to ring impedance Reliability/Long term stability George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

8 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
Sources See ILC-Americas site for list of presentations. Institutions interested in sources: Argonne, Cornell, Fermilab, Jlab, LLNL, SLAC Summary mostly from David Schultz. George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

9 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

10 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

11 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

12 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

13 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

14 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
Kickers Institutions interested in kickers: Cornell, Fermilab, University of Illinois, LLNL, SLAC. Basic choice seems to be between a fast pulsed kicker (using some sort of stripline geometry) and a more exotic device, using RF to kick, or otherwise manipulate bunches. Issues for pulsed kicker: switch speed, stability. Issues for RF kickers (e.g., pulse compression kicker): stability, general proof of concept. Issues for all: impedance impact, reflections and ringing. George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

15 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
Kickers Confidence in our ability to find/develop a satisfactory “switch” varies considerably from person to person. General consensus is that fast on/not-so-fast off is a good idea. This goes well with inclusion of gaps in bunch train to help clear electron cloud. It is the kicker that led to a 17 km TESLA dog bone. How small a ring would be possible with a so-fast-you-can’t-believe-it kicker? Probably smaller than 6 km, maybe as small as 3 km. Other effects (higher current, for example) will begin to dominate. 17 km ring: < 20 ns rise time. 6 km ring: < 6 ns rise time, < 60 ns fall time. George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

16 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
The specs Kicker specs depend, in part, on beam dynamics: phase space volume occupied by a just-kicked bunch must be well separated from that of an unkicked bunch. Dog bone (TESLA TDR) kicker specs: impulse: 100 G-m (3 MeV/c) ± 0.07 G-m (2 keV/c) residual (off) impulse: 0 ± 0.07 G-m (2 keV/c) rise/fall time: < 20 ns Perhaps larger (but less precise) impulse at injection, smaller (but more precise) impulse at extraction will be desirable. Small ring kicker rise, fall times can be asymmetric: leading edge < 6 ns, trailing edge < 60 ns George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

17 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
What’s happening Fermilab is presently gearing up to study a pulse compression kicker module using the A0 16 MeV beam. Some investigation of how well-suited A0 is for this purpose will begin early in 2005. Thinking about pulsed kickers is going on too. George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

18 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
Damping rings Summary from Andy Wolski. Institutions interested in the rings: Argonne, Cornell, Fermilab, University of Illinois, LBNL, LLNL, SLAC George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

19 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

20 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

21 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

22 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

23 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
Bunch compressor So far only SLAC and LBNL are thinking about this. Short bunches are better: wake field, energy spread considerations. Leaving damping ring: 6 mm bunch length. 0.3 mm bunch length is desired at IP. Summary from Gerry Dugan. George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

24 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

25 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

26 ILC-America + ILC-global near-term goals
Possible goals and timelines: pre-KEK: discuss tentative plans for injector R&D with our colleagues in America, Asia, and Europe to have a sense of who would like to do what. at KEK: rough-out an R&D plan aimed at choosing a kicker technology in ~2 years at Snowmass (August, 2005): small workshops with international participation to assess how well we’ve gotten started, and what we have learned? George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004

27 George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004
End notes The kicker and damping ring scare the daylights out of me. We must build one and make it work before the ILC main linac is completed. More information: Studies Pertaining to a Small Damping Ring for the International Linear Collider, FERMILAB-TM-2272-AD-TD ILC Damping Rings web site: George Gollin, WG3 summary, SLAC ILC-America, October 2004


Download ppt "George Gollin University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google